March 20, 2014

10 Ways To Generate Media Buzz For Your Startup

John Egan  /  PR Daily

For a startup such as my own at SpareFoot, media coverage is golden.

Earned media coverage–-stories in newspapers, on TV stations, on blogs–-carries a little more weight than paid media (which, as the name suggests, you've got to pay for).

To help your startup build credibility, we reached out to experts for their advice on how to create media buzz. Here are 10 of their tips.

1. Be sure you've got news to share.

No member of the news media will report about your startup merely because it exists. So you've got to ask yourself: How does your startup stand out from your competitors or other businesses? "Pick the unique aspects of what you do and highlight them," said Ronjini Joshua, owner of Los Angeles PR agency The Silver Telegram. "It's important to be honest with yourself so that you can craft a creative message."

Define your startup's story before you do any media outreach, said Jennifer Fortney, president ofCascade Communications, a PR firm in Chicago.

"Too many people write a press release that reads like an advertisement or advertorial. It will go in the trash immediately," Fortney said. Journalists "don't have time to figure out the story, so you need to tell them your story."

2. Keep it simple.

Let's say your startup makes widgets. Don't bog down your PR messaging with hard-to-figure-out language about the widgets. Keep the language simple enough that your grandmother can grasp it.

"Avoiding using big words and too much industry lingo is important," Joshua said. "You want to make sure that it's easy to understand any way you look at it. [Journalists don't] want to spend an hour to decode what you are trying to say."

3. Target the right audience.

"Who are you trying to reach and why? You need to find out what you want the end goal to be," Joshua said.

For instance, are you trying to attract more Facebook fans? Are you trying to boost Web traffic? Are you trying to ramp up sales?

"If your target is mothers, you want to reach out to the media that mothers read, not just media that you think would be cool," Joshua said.

4. Be on the lookout for opportunities.

Discount retailer Target made headlines recently with the announcement that millions of customers were the victims of a data breach. So if your startup makes software that detects data breaches, you should latch on to this news before it's not news anymore.

"Constantly scan the news and see if there is any way you can hook yourself onto a developing story and how doing so will benefit the public," said Shaun Walker, creative director at HERO|farm, a marketing, PR and design firm in New Orleans.

Another tip: Sign up for Help a Reporter Out, or HARO. Through this online service, journalists seek experts in an array of fields to interview for stories. Regular emails from HARO will alert you about these opportunities.

5. Build relationships.

Rather than blindly distributing press releases, get to know reporters, editors, and bloggers who cover your industry or your community. Valerie Jennings, CEO of Jennings Social Media Marketingin suburban Kansas City, Mo., cited Twitter, LinkedIn, and blogs as avenues for outreach.

If a targeted journalist is in your town, invite him or her out for a lunch or a cup of coffee. Face-to-face contact never goes out of style. During this get-together, you can offer your startup as a resource for stories related to the company's expertise, instead of blatantly asking for coverage of your startup, according to Crissy Lintner, managing director of the Dallas office of Obsidian Public Relations.

6. Host an event.

Forget the old-school news conference. Lintner said a startup should entice journalists by throwing a launch party, setting up a product demonstration, or holding an open house. Those are far more appealing than a stale news conference.

**7. Don't bug journalists. **

If a reporter or editor isn't interested in your PR pitch, then respect that decision. Don't make things worse by being a pest.

"Don't take it personally. There's a lot of things going on in the world," Joshua said. "There is a good possibility that there is a better fit for you out there; just keep it moving."

8. Stay calm.

Keep in mind that a busy journalist normally receives hundreds of emails a day.

"When you're sending them information about your company, share it and don't shove it down their throat," Joshua said. "You may not get media coverage that first time that you contact them, but if you keep them in the loop and always inform them of how what you are doing is important to their target audience, they will start viewing you as a trusted source."

9. Avoid the "bowl of spaghetti" approach.

Resist the urge to do PR by spam, otherwise known as the "bowl of spaghetti" approach.

"Don't just send out mass emails to [journalists] hoping that something sticks [like a bowl of spaghetti thrown against the wall]. Although a lot of people do it, [journalists] hate it and the odds are not in your favor," Fortney said.

10. Steer clear of publicity stunts.

Publicity stunts are risky. Take, for example, an effort by beverage company Snapple to make the world's largest popsicle in 2005. The popsicle quickly began to melt, and New York City's Union Square was flooded with strawberry-kiwi liquid, according to Business Insider__.

"If [publicity stunts] backfire, you may end up with a public relations disaster on your hands that you don't have the resources to handle. This can scare away reporters and users from ever engaging with your brand," said Joshua Ziering, founder of KillSwitch, a San Francisco tech startup.